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Miss.Florence Nightingale

The "Lady with the lamp" as Florence Nightingale is fondly remembered.

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Quality Education !!!

Rural College Of Nursing help the students to integrate principles of mental hygiene,ethical and moral code involved in the practice of nursing.

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Poineer in Health Care

Listen to your client, take into consideration all their input, weigh the options, then if necessary ignore all of it and design what you think will work best :)

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If you do it right,
it will last forever.

Listen to your client, take into consideration all their input, weigh the options, then if necessary ignore all of it and design what you think will work best :)

"No religion is greater than service,and service to huminity is service to god"

- Dr.A.P.J Abdul Kalam


About Miss.Florence Nightingale

Florence Nightingale was born on 12 May 12 1820 in Florence, Italy. From an early age, she felt it was her calling to become a nurse, but mainly due to class and gender prejudices, Nightingale only trained to become a nurse when she was thirty-one years old. Nightingale led a group of nurses working at a military hospital during the Crimean War at Scutari, Turkey. She was appalled by the conditions in the hospital and began gathering extensive statistics about the health of the soldiers she treated. She often worked around the clock and visited her patience late at night carrying a lamp for light. This resulted in her nickname 'the lady with the lamp'.

Nightingale began fighting for the conditions in the hospital to improve, which was met with much resistance. Eventually however, thanks to her contacts at The Times newspaper, Nightingale was given the task of improving the quality of the sanitation in the military hospital. She was therefore able to dramatically reduce the death-rate of her patients, and this began a life-long effort to better health by improving the treatment environment. In order to share her opinions on health reform, Nightingale published two books, Notes on Hospital (1859) and Notes on Nursing (1859). With support, Nightingale was able to raise £59,000 to improve the quality of nursing. In 1860, she used this money to found the Nightingale School & Home for Nurses at St. Thomas's Hospital. She also became involved in the training of nurses for employment in the workhouses that had been established as a result of the 1834 Poor Law Amendment Act.

Nightingale also held strong opinions on women's rights. In her book Suggestions for Thought to Searchers after Religious Truths (1859) she argued strongly for the removal of restrictions that prevented women having careers. In later life, Nightingale suffered from poor health and in 1895 went blind. A statistician and epidemiologist, she died on 13 August 1910. Today, International Nurses Day is celebrated around the world every 12 May, the anniversary of Florence Nightingale's birth. Nightingale made a significant contribution to nursing internationally; by raising the status of nursing as a desirable occupation, raising educational standards for nurses and improving health care standards in general.